Not only is she appearing in her fourth season of
The Big Bang Theory, but she also recently signed on to host a reboot of
Candid Camera on TV Land and is the new face of Texas Instruments — as part of a selfie
contest designed to make math and science education fun.

Bialik, a neuroscientist in real life, became involved with Texas Instruments about the time
that she began working on
Big Bang.

“I’ve had a TI graphing calculator since I was about 14, so it was kind of a no-brainer,” she
said about being approached to be a brand ambassador.

In the role, Bialik, 38, works with the company to reach out to students and classrooms to make
studying feel more approachable and exciting.

With her own experience as a student and instructor — as well as her parents’ combined 70 years
as teachers — Bialik didn’t hesitate to sign on to the cause, which includes a selfie promotion
through Sept. 21 in which she will select the winner.

The actress has also upped her own selfie game along with
Big Bang co-stars Jim Parsons, Kevin Sussman and Kunal Nayyar on Instagram, thanks mostly
to Kaley Cuoco.

Bialik shared that Cuoco “had her finger on the pulse of things I didn’t even know existed, so
she was the person I learned so much about social media from.”

She added, “It’s been really fun having an Instagram relationship in addition to our other
relationship. It’s something neat that we get to do in addition to spending all of our time
together at work.”

Big Bang fans continue to be fascinated by the unorthodox love story unfolding between
Bialik’s Amy and Parsons’ Sheldon.

She remained tight-lipped on spoilers for the upcoming eighth season — to premiere Sept. 22 on
CBS — but said more stories could be forthcoming from creator Chuck Lorre for Amy, Bernadette
(Melissa Rauch) and Penny (Cuoco).

Although Bialik is a fan favorite on the hit comedy, she hadn’t even seen the show when she was
asked to audition for it.

“I wasn’t planning for that at all,” she said wryly of her fan-favorite status. “It’s been a
very pleasant surprise.”

Meanwhile, in her new gig as co-host opposite Peter Funt on
Candid Camera, Bialik gets to experience a new kind of science: the social science of
watching people experience the antics set up by the production.

“It’s been great,” she said of her experience on the show, which can be seen at 8 p.m. Tuesdays
on TV Land. “It’s rare that you find things that are such a pleasurable and good match.”

The hidden-camera series, originally created by Allen Funt, has been on and off the air since
1948.

The new run of episodes allows for some modern-day teasing, as with a failed drone delivery
service, as well as classic bits such as an engineless car.

Said Bialik: “That style of humor — that notion of watching people be human and the sort of
social experiment that comes (with it) — to me, that’s timeless.”